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(1) Modeling Digital Systems © Sudhakar Yalamanchili, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006.

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Presentation on theme: "(1) Modeling Digital Systems © Sudhakar Yalamanchili, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006."— Presentation transcript:

1 (1) Modeling Digital Systems © Sudhakar Yalamanchili, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006

2 (2) Systems Hierarchy Functions CPUs, memories ALUs, registers Switches Increasing Fidelity #of events Level of Abstraction

3 (3) Describing Systems From Webster’s Dictionary: –System: “An assemblage of objects united by some form of regular interaction or dependence” What aspects of a digital system do we want to describe? –Interface –Function: behavioral and structural Tothe Processor microphone headphones speakers amplifier ZPS 61899

4 (4) What Elements Should be in a Description? Descriptions should be at multiple levels of abstraction –The descriptive elements must be common to multiple levels of hierarchy The elements should enable meaningful and accurate simulation of hardware described using the elements –Elements should have attributes of time as well as function The elements should enable the generation of hardware elements that realize a correct physical implementation –Existence of a mapping from elements to VLSI devices

5 (5) What Elements Should be in a Description? VHDL was conceived for the description of digital systems –From switches to networked systems Keep in mind the pragmatic issues of design re-use and portability of descriptions –Portability across technology generations –Portability across a range of cost/performance points Attributes of digital systems serve as the starting point –Language features designed to capture the key attributes

6 (6) Attributes of Digital Systems Digital systems are about signals and their values Events, propagation delays, concurrency –Signal value changes at specific points in time Time ordered sequence of events produces a waveform

7 (7) Attributes of Digital Systems: Timing Timing: computation of events takes place at specific points in time Need to “wait for” an event: in this case the clock Timing is an attribute of both synchronous and asynchronous systems D Clk S Q R 10152025 30 3540 Clk D Q Time (ns) Triggering edge Q

8 (8) Attributes of Digital Systems: Timing Example: Asynchronous communication No global clock Still need to wait for events on specific signals TRANSMIT ACK

9 (9) Attributes of Digital Systems: Signal Values possible signal values? We associate logical values with the state of a signal Signal Values: IEEE 1164 Value System ValueInterpretation UUninitialized XForcing Unknown 0Forcing 0 1Forcing 1 ZHigh Impedance WWeak Unknown LWeak 0 HWeak 1 -Don’t Care

10 (10) Attributes of Digital Systems: Multiple Drivers Shared Signals –multiple drivers How is the value of the signal determined? –arbitration protocols –wired logic

11 (11) Modeling Digital Systems We seek to describe attributes of digital systems common to multiple levels of abstraction –events, propagation delays, concurrency –waveforms and timing –signal values –shared signals Hardware description languages must provide constructs for naturally describing these attributes of a specific design –simulators use such descriptions for “mimicing” the physical system –synthesis compilers use such descriptions for synthesizing manufacturable hardware specifications that conform to this description

12 (12) Execution Models for VHDL Programs Two classes of execution models govern the application of VHDL programs For Simulation –Discrete event simulation –Understanding is invaluable in debugging programs For Synthesis –Hardware inference –The resulting circuit is a function of the building blocks used for implementation Primitives: NAND vs. NOR Cost/performance

13 (13) Simulation vs. Synthesis Simulation and synthesis are complementary processes

14 (14) Simulation of Digital Systems Digital systems are modeled as the generation of events – value transitions – on signals Discrete event simulations manage the generation and ordering of events –Correct sequencing of event processing –Correct sequencing of computations caused by events @5 ns @10 ns @15 ns @5 ns v1  v2 @5ns v3  v4 @10ns v5  v6 @15ns Head 0

15 (15) Discrete Event Simulation: Example 1010 a@5ns U1U1 carry@5ns U0U0 sum@5ns 0101 sum@10ns 1010 carry@10ns 0101 a@10ns 1010 b@10ns 1010 a@15ns 5ns 10ns Initial state: a = b = 1, sum = carry = U Event List HeadSimulation Time 0ns U1U1 carry@5ns U0U0 sum@5ns New event generated from input Update time Update signal values, execute, generate new events, update time Update signal values, execute, generate new events b a sum carry

16 (16) Discrete Event Simulation Management of simulation time: ordering of events Two step model of the progression of time –Evaluate all affected components at the current time: events on input signals –Schedule future events and move to the next time step: the next time at which events take place

17 (17) Simulation Modeling VHDL programs describe the generation of events in digital systems Discrete event simulator manages event ordering and progression of time Now we can quantitatively understand accuracy vs. time trade-offs –Greater detail  more events  greater accuracy –Less detail  smaller number of events  faster simulation speed b a sum carry VHDL Model compiler Discrete Event Simulator from Vendor

18 (18) Synthesis and Hardware Inference Both processes can produce very different results! Synthesis engine HDL Design Specification Author HDL Author Hardware Design

19 (19) Summary VHDL is used to describe digital systems and hence has language constructs for key attributes –Events, propagation delays, and concurrency –Timing, and waveforms –Signal values and use of multiple drivers for a signal VHDL has an underlying discrete event simulation model –Model the generation of events on signals –Built in mechanisms for managing events and the progression of time –Designer simply focuses on writing accurate descriptions


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